Hey there,
I've been thinking about this setup recently and wondered why it has not been thought of. My immediate response is that, it probably has been thought of but doesn't work. That being said, if anyone knows why or how this setup might or might not work, let me know...
Would it be possible to hook up a compressed air tank (say 8 Gallon with 150psi) to your intake manifold. When you step on the gas, and your turbos are producing, say 2lbs of boost, this compressed air tank, through a fun arrangement of valves and sensors, would release, say 8lbs of boost to bring you up to 10lbs of boost instantaneously, killing turbo lag. As your turbos begin to do most of the work, the pressure release from the tank would be reduced until it releases no air.
That is basically a simple explanation of the system I had imagined. There would be other technical things invovled in the actual setup (ie. MAP sensor probably, among other things), but the question is would it work.
Two things which have been brought to my attention by people I have run this by (two mechanics), would be 1) the increased pressure on the intake side might blow out backwards through the turbo because the pressure on the exhaust side isn't as high. I was thinking that, as long as there is pressure on the compressor (ie when the throttle is open and your turbo(s) are spooling up), it would hold the increased pressure. And 2) if you were constantly charging and releasing pressure from a pressure tank, condensation would be an issue and filtering that water would have to be considered.
To charge the compressed air tank, you could fill it up at any local gas station, and I'm sure there is many rigs you could make up to charge the tank on board, either using an electric compressor or pulley system (sounds like a supercharger hey?, but if you could only make it function when the pressure tank is below 150psi, or whatever you want it set for).
I did a search online and couldn't find anything related to this... :hit_head:
D
I've been thinking about this setup recently and wondered why it has not been thought of. My immediate response is that, it probably has been thought of but doesn't work. That being said, if anyone knows why or how this setup might or might not work, let me know...
Would it be possible to hook up a compressed air tank (say 8 Gallon with 150psi) to your intake manifold. When you step on the gas, and your turbos are producing, say 2lbs of boost, this compressed air tank, through a fun arrangement of valves and sensors, would release, say 8lbs of boost to bring you up to 10lbs of boost instantaneously, killing turbo lag. As your turbos begin to do most of the work, the pressure release from the tank would be reduced until it releases no air.
That is basically a simple explanation of the system I had imagined. There would be other technical things invovled in the actual setup (ie. MAP sensor probably, among other things), but the question is would it work.
Two things which have been brought to my attention by people I have run this by (two mechanics), would be 1) the increased pressure on the intake side might blow out backwards through the turbo because the pressure on the exhaust side isn't as high. I was thinking that, as long as there is pressure on the compressor (ie when the throttle is open and your turbo(s) are spooling up), it would hold the increased pressure. And 2) if you were constantly charging and releasing pressure from a pressure tank, condensation would be an issue and filtering that water would have to be considered.
To charge the compressed air tank, you could fill it up at any local gas station, and I'm sure there is many rigs you could make up to charge the tank on board, either using an electric compressor or pulley system (sounds like a supercharger hey?, but if you could only make it function when the pressure tank is below 150psi, or whatever you want it set for).
I did a search online and couldn't find anything related to this... :hit_head:
D
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